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Network Scale-Up Method/Dokaz
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Network Scale-Up Method

The network scale-up method (NSUM) estimates the size of a hidden population — such as undocumented migrants or members of a stigmatized group — by asking ordinary people in a general survey how many members of that population they personally know. Developed by Killworth, McCarty, Bernard, and colleagues and formalized in their 1998 Evaluation Review paper, it rests on a simple bookkeeping idea: if you know roughly how many people each respondent knows in total, and you observe how many of those acquaintances belong to the hidden group, you can scale that fraction up to the whole society. The trick to recovering the total acquaintance count is to ask about several groups whose sizes are already known — people named Michael, nurses, women who gave birth last year — and use the responses to calibrate each respondent's personal-network size. Bernard and colleagues' 2010 review brought the method into mainstream public-health surveillance and emphasized two crucial corrections: transmission bias, because people often do not know which of their acquaintances belong to a hidden group, and barrier effects, because the hidden group may be socially clustered away from typical respondents. For migration research NSUM is attractive precisely because it never requires contacting migrants directly; it infers their numbers from the social fabric of the wider population.

Sources recorded, not reviewed

Izvorni zapis

Citati kopirani doslovno iz izvornog zapisa metode. Ne impliciraju nikakvu provjeru na razini tvrdnje.

Network Scale-Up Method for Estimating Migrant Population Size
Taksonomski zapis metode · process-pipeline / migration-studies
  • Bernard, H. R., Hallett, T., Iovita, A., Johnsen, E. C., Lyerla, R., McCarty, C., Mahy, M., Salganik, M. J., & Stroup, S. (2010). Counting Hard-to-Count Populations: The Network Scale-Up Method for Public Health. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 86(Suppl 2), ii11-ii15. · DOI 10.1136/sti.2010.044446
  • Killworth, P. D., McCarty, C., Bernard, H. R., Shelley, G. A., & Johnsen, E. C. (1998). Estimation of Seroprevalence, Rape, and Homelessness in the United States Using a Social Network Approach. Evaluation Review, 22(2), 289-308. · DOI 10.1177/0193841X9802200205
Otvori cijelu metodu

Uređene tvrdnje

Tvrdnje pohranjene u knjigu dokaza, svaka s vlastitom procjenom.

Nema uređenih tvrdnji

Ovaj prikaz ne izmišlja procjenu tvrdnje kada knjiga dokaza nema nijednu.

Povezane metode

Generirano iz grafa metode i prikazano kao strojno predložene relacije — ne implicira se nikakva tvrdnja dokaza.

Same method familyMigrant Stock Estimationmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Taxonomic bucketMultiplicity Sampling of Migrant Stockmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Taxonomic bucketTime-Location Samplingmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.

Status dokaza

Sources recorded, not reviewed

Bibliographic sources are present. Claim-level evidence review has not been performed.

Izvori

2 zabilježenih citata, kopiranih iz izvornog zapisa metode.

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